Engineering students’ perceptions of engineering specialties |
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Authors: | Victoria A. Shivy Terri N. Sullivan |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, 808 West Franklin Street, Richmond, VA 23284-2018, USA |
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Abstract: | The field of engineering is defined by a number of specialty areas, thus most engineering students must decide upon an educational specialty track within the engineering major. Data on familiarity with, and perceptions of similarity among 11 engineering specialties were collected from 129 undergraduate engineering students from a public urban university. Similarity data were collected by way of a paired comparison task, and multidimensional scaling techniques were used to map these data into spatial representations. A three-dimensional solution was selected. Analysis of variance procedures also were used to examine differences in perceptions of engineering specialties by gender, ethnicity, commitment to career choice, and career decision-making self-efficacy. Results indicated that female students rated engineering specialties as more prestigious than male students, and students with a more dogmatic stance towards career rated engineering as relatively exclusive to men. |
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Keywords: | Career specialty choice Career decision-making Multidimensional scaling Engineering students |
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